Six Puppies Perish in Early Morning Fire

Fire in Myrtletown area

Firefighters climb on the roof of the burning structure. [Photo provided by HBF]

Press release from Humboldt Bay Fire:

Early on the morning of Monday, May 6 at approximately 2:30am Humboldt Bay Fire responded to a reported house on fire in the 3300 block of Park Street in Eureka. HBF responded with three engines, one ladder truck, and one Chief Officer. The fourth engine that would normally respond as part of a first alarm was on another emergency response. Additionally, one volunteer Fire Support personnel responded and provided traffic control.

Fire in Myrtletown area

[Photo provided by HBF]

The first arriving unit arrived on scene and reported heavy fire burning in a large two-story single-family residence. As additional units arrived crews quickly went to work to search for trapped occupants

, extinguish the fire, and remove smoke from the residence. All six occupants were out of the home upon arrival, but it was reported that several dogs may be trapped in the house.

Fire in Myrtletown area

[Photo provided by HBF]

Due to the size of the fire and the complexity of the home’s design a second alarm was requested, bringing in one additional HBF Chief Officer and fire engines from neighboring departments to help stabilize the incident. The fire was controlled in about 35 minutes and took approximately 3 hours to completely mitigate.After the fire was extinguished HBF investigators began to determine the cause of the fire, which is still under investigation at this time. PG&E responded and removed the utility hazards.

The total estimated property value of the structure saved is $375,000, with fire and smoke damage estimated to be $125,000. There were no civilian or firefighter injuries, but tragically six puppies perished in the fire.

Humboldt Bay Fire would like to thank City Ambulance of Eureka, Eureka Police Department, Samoa Peninsula Fire District, Loleta Volunteer Fire Dept and Arcata Fire District for their assistance on this incident, and in providing station coverage.

Fire in Myrtletown area

[Photo provided by HBF]

Humboldt Bay Fire would like to remind everyone that smoke alarms can provide early notification of smoke in the residences and should be installed in all living spaces and regularly checked. Additionally

, portable space heaters should be monitored as they can be dangerous and should be used in accordance with manufacturer’s specifications.

Earlier: Structure Fire in Eureka Early This Morning

Facebooktwitterpinterestmail

Join the discussion! For rules visit: https://kymkemp.com/commenting-rules

Comments system how-to: https://wpdiscuz.com/community/postid/10599/

Subscribe
Notify of
guest

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

4 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Farce
Guest
Farce
13 days ago

Sad. Not sure how that can happen…. how everybody can run outside and leave the fur babies behind. I only hope there’s a good reason…

Guest
Guest
Guest
12 days ago

Wow.. why couldn’t they get the puppies out? Guessing they probably didn’t care much about these dogs.

Kym Kemp
Admin
12 days ago
Reply to  Guest

In spite of the statement by HBF, I heard over the scanner a woman being taken to the hospital with mild burns and mild smoke inhalation. She apparently had tried to get everyone out. Sometimes it isn’t possible to save everyone.

Bug on a Windshield
Guest
Bug on a Windshield
12 days ago

awrRROOOOOOOoooooooooo

woof

The Rainbow Bridge appears early for some. My deepest, furriest sympathies to the family.